August 15, 190L THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. OEUTSCH PRIZE TRIALS Former IsTcxtors and Tests of Dirigible Balloons. SJLSTGS-BiniOSrS 0TSE2 ACESr3 Cearai 11 a farand bf tko DarSas tmmmss Savfavator. Wlo la a R tlarr hy rrofeslos Expert's ! crtitt of tb Canal rarll. of Uali Tfcat Wa. WrcltcU. TLe l:tsei x-rize, which M. Eactos lcct. io La Jut narrowly e-caii-4 dnth la attemptla;: to circle the ll.rftl towrr la LU d:i:tle balloon. Li t--ti trying for two.aammeri to w;a, w st 'rmi 1a ;ian a. i--. mj tL N-w York Tribute. The conditions f tli coiitefct were tL-e: TLe aero naut tLoli rt from Sumner. about thre ose-half tulles from the Eif 1YI lowr, iske a voysjr around liiat cw;al slrnctnr asl return to the j-c'.st of dtiartcre Inside of 20 raln-t;t-. T0 d It would be ceary to trsvHI mt tL rate of 11 lallea or tn'r isa bvur for fall seven vrAU- and -Z2v&strai tL Une'.l-'.lUj of irojx-l-XlxiC tr.r.:-s -1 otherwise aaccess fjiilj r-air;!. U craft- TLe sum to M. Soto-I.tiSiont ptt LI s!rLip np iwv-ral t !:-- In tte spring and sum cer of !'. a a-J cade tLe attempt in-fm-s'lf that 1. without tunmoalo; tl v j-3"iz to wiuef the performance. I'lnzlly Le r-aJf a trial usder official cnrtiir. Till aa 1b September. But vstaetsisg west wrong with bis p I arataf, and Le descended before cora-lUi.i-z tLe Journey. Ilia first notable a'-M fbi year wss not made over tbe huret&er-Eiffel tower course and hence n bot an attempt to ect:re tbe prize. Ile iled frosa St. Clocd to the Long c Latiij race course and simply maueu-r-d tn tbe sir. Tbe federal j!aa which tb! daring yvc &avltor pursue la much like tLat cf CapLaia lire and llenard of tLe Fn-cca array la 1S. They eru ;,kTrd a jpas bs; to aut-taia tbeSr ap varatut az.J bajed !t like a cigar la or irr to rJt-'-e atraopberlc resistance. VSL a wrrw prup-ilr. driven by an ebMc tsutor aaJ storage battery. Kreb asd Uesard derelo;ed a fpeed cf H tu'Mn- aa Lour, but thia was xnaln tii for culy a few ix.iout - Aiaoir ttce Lo bare followed this ;i lrvn xreet-2rtt was tbe Gertaaa CVunt t .a Z-M-rila. who trW bia air ' p (T.r LaLe C-jr. -tat.ee last year l-i a la Jt-!y and October. Tbe enor t.ocs !re of tbe craft It wai orer 4o0 f.t l ! tL tsic'i own, promS- dow a .tsry officer and friend of tLe k'.zz of WcnterDUrj; attracted o ir.C' h att-Dtia to tLe venture tbat k -t r--f y saybyiy noticed Santos-D'J-t.-if. who- work waa really much t,-. re j rnr..l-:-s. Von Zyilia bad a t ; L; with a feeble engine, a email pK-'be tctor. wLHe tLe tbodfat young rrrsxllij-a ia lari Lad a amlabed. It attains a ajeed of 150 turn & minute. "Toe ateerinff derlce ia of Bilk and 1 placed between the ballxn and the framework abore the propeller. The balloon Is Inflated with hydrogen, and In order to maintain at all tiroes a ten sion on the enrclope that Is to say, perfect Inflation a compensating bal loon filled with air Is placed In the in terior. This Is inflated automatically, as required, by a small compressor actuated by the motor, the air being conducted to .it by tubltg. A. guide rope Is suspended under tbe frame work, and with Its aid the necessary Inclination Is obtained to effect the movements of ascent and descent. Such, In brief, are the apparatus and method employed by M. Santos-Dura on t." AUTOMOBILE RACE PLANS. Plana to Eliminate Daascr to Spec tator at Jlewport'a Contest. The members of the city government of Newport appointed to act In the matter of the automobile races on Aug. SO held a meeting the otter night and received propositions from the National Automobile Racing association In re gard to the manner in which the road races will be held. The association has agreed to employ at its expense some SO or 40 special policemen, who will be placed at intervals along the course to preTent the possibility of any accident. There will also be a reserve squad of a balf dozen men tbat can be called upon In case of an accident. The city solic itor has also been Instructed to draw np a form of agreement, which every automobllist who starts in the race must sign, which releases the city from any expense caused by an accident. If one refuses to sign this agreement, he will not be allowed to start It has been decided to have the races start and finish In front cf Crossways, tbe villa of Stuyvesant Fish. Tbe course will be around tbe drive and across Carroll avenue, coming out by Mr. Fish's again. Red danger flags will be placed at all roads and every precaution taken to prevent any acci dent. Tbe petition sent to the city asking for permission to hold the races was beaded by the name of Mrs. Herman Oelrichs. and she Is being congratu lated on all sides today, as it has been called the Oelrichs petition. MISS BEAL IN DEMAND. JUST A LITTLE OF YOUR TIME TO CONSIDER SOUE Husbands Galore For Girl Who Drew a Lucky Claim. GETS MANY KOTOS OF LETTEES. JAPANESE WIFE HIS NURSE. Sir Edwin Arnold. Blind auid Para. Iraed. Devotedly Taken Care Of. Tbe Mumea b brown, velet eyes. Curtained with satin, aleepily; Yen wonder if those Hda would riao Tbe newest, atrangest sir tit to ace. Bat wfcen aba eta t ten, laugfcs or play Kcto. Liwa or aamisen. Jlo Jewel r lea ma with brighter rays Than Cash frora tbote dark lashes then. "Tbe Miumec," Sir Edwin Arnold. The pathetic tenderness and faith- fulness of the Japanese wife of Sir Edwin Arnold In his stricken condition hare caused great comment In social and literary circles in London, says tbe New York Evening JournaL Sir small ship, Edwin bas lost the sight of his eyes. w a raotor wL'.cb waa relatively c.n-tL tuore pat-rfeL la certain de ls :1 prrhar b'. craft was superior. Vca Ze?pelia was doomed to failure rrora tL omt. lie made elgbt or ten c.'.U aa Lour fee a few minute, but cv-cSJ t. t beat tLe record. He spent a F J dt-al cf money, costly bis own. er 1 Las now deSaitely n-tired from tbe Crl-,L atitos-rntont is aa engineer by pro f.tfckfti aud sLotit 2-i years old. Hi rxin& ootor i a carrel cf ULtaes. It i de,5i especially by tbe JIt-r. I a inkier, develop seven borae iKinrrr ccl weiLa TO pound. Tbe gas- 0- lti taaLa are cigar sbaped. But even with til beautiful eu!;iaect, la some r-;rts trst-sled. Santos-Dcmont has t-vt yet batea tbe record of Krebs and TL tecidect. wLich resulted so bap p ly. retiiis one of tbe fate of Herr 1- ilWatLAl. wLo lot Li life ia Aogust, i";. tbrocgh tbe wreckicg of bis flying c-artiue. TLat device was practically a pair of lire wings and meant to sua- ' t'.a Lim wL'.le be slid down an aerial slope fftta a bouse top cr a cliff. He : tad ruaue 2,t;0 such C!gLu before bis j d.-stL. yotscs EagUibmao, Flicker, who !:. tart-d Lii'ectLal to wa extent, but ei? t'ted isueh criiuabty, met a simi lar fte ;a i'.'j. II ; plan was to start ?.':- tLe j.rizc ar.d r1e very gently i...rrs toTr-d Lira. Evidently be c nr.t ta drive Lis aeroplane with a gas TLe caa.trurtioa cf M. Sacto-Du-n. ; :.:' tiloa is tbus dooely described ia tLe current ntist-er of Tbe Scleatiuc & m r.-5 a ; Tl-e ba!I-o?i proper is cylindrical f. 1 i er-1 witu s!'t. its eitremi-t:- bei:-g l-ltted. It ! Ill feet long, ai it cutlral capacity is ISjSuo feet, r .:--r- i d t r paau wire fcoise Z$ or 40 f--t Wutr tLe balloon is a l'gi t franie- ork wLore proile very ruch rm tU-s tLit of tLe balk-oa pmp-r. Tbe f ra? terror k Is triasrular in i-ertion and i formal f ttrt-e loss: pi rf woti. 9nri3 at tbe end sad trengtbeaei by crj I rrr is and steel wires. This frmaewor& ss;iorts a four cylinder. 16 fcoreower Eiotor f tLe T'ion-lioutoo tri, it fteS re-M-rvo'r. tbe shaft and tLe propelier. Tbe er.ice is placed veil toward one ecd. aad tbe aeronaut r! !e la a l:jrtt tssket at tbe other end. Here be baa ca3er Lis control all of tbe raaeticery for rcaaeuveticg tbe bal loca. also tbe ballast aad tbe guide rof. Tbe repect!ve poaitlons f tbe vari ces wetgLzs were determined after r-ajy rxperirseata. and Its ejs!lSbr1ara is perf eet- This assures Its borizoo tal!ty sad as e;cal tetaloa n tbe rus peJers. This explains wfcy tbe eero rct is so far separated from bis motor. TLe pr?p:ier. 14 feet In diameter. Is eoDpusel of two vanes cf wood and itetl, cvveced with eiik and bigbly and as a result of paralysis be cannot walk a step. Constant and tender In her devotion to him Is bis little dark raced wire, who before ner marriage was Mrs. Watanabe, the widow of a distinguished officer of the Japanese army. The talk ol the town was Sir Edwin's marriage to his sweet faced wife. He met her In Yokohama in 1891 when he was visiting Japan with his daughter Edith. Their marriage was sudden. so sudden that Miss Edith was shock ed. It was explained to her that they had been wedded by the Japanese methou rt drinking a cup of tea togeth er. When tbe daughter asked her fa ther about the ceremony, which seem ed to her questionable, be said: "It is tbe custom of tbe country and will be as binding on me as would be & pompous ceremony in a cathedral" DOG JOINS A LODGE. Initiated Into the Fraternity of tha Knlsnta of Pjrthla. A thoroughbred pet dov? was made a full C edged Knight of Pythias by Kearney lodge of Chainbersburg. Pa., tbe other evening, says the Philadel phia Press. . Actor William along. whose home Is at Chambersburg. took tbe last degree and requested that his dog be allowed to walk the narrow path with him. It was ngreed to, and tbe Skye terrier made the rounds with bis master. As far as Is known be 13 the only canine Knight of Pythias In tbe world. Alleared Railroad Manager Offers Her a Bls Block of Railroad Stocks aa an In da cement Medical . Stu dent Want Her to Watt Two Tear. Yoanar Kansas. Means Business. Miss Mattie Beal of Wichita, Kan., who drew the second choice claim In the Lawton land district, is receiving as high as 100 proposals of marriage dally from all parts of the United States. In her absence In Oklahoma her mother and sister open them and find much amusement In their perusaL They expressed the other day about 200 of the letters to Miss Beal, who had not seen any of them owing to the fact tbat she has been away from borne practically all the time since bearing of ber good fortune. Mrs. Beal allowed a representative of the Kansas City Times to look over such of the letters as were not mark ed "confidential,"- and he noted some peculiar phases of love sickness. One man claiming to be a railroad manager In Michigan gushes forth his love for Miss Beal in eloquent language and promises to make ber a present of a block of railroad stocks worth from $30,000 to $40,000 If she becomes his wife. He says bis friends call him handsome, that be Is a widower, and. though far advanced In years, he looks young. He refused to give his name, but gave her the number of a postofflce box at a station in the vicinity of De troit which he said he had rented espe cially, for her communications to him, promising that when he should receive one letter from her he would satisfy ber as to his identity and position. ; Tbe senior partner in a Kansas City manufacturing enterprise tendered Miss Beal his heart in a very pathetic manner, saying his last wife had been a telephone girl, whose brief reign of a year and a half over bis household filled bis home with sunshine. She died about three years ago. A young man in St. Louis with $4,000 cash and a bouse In Joliet, Ills., worth $3,000 begs Miss Beal to let him know whether her heart is not pledged. His chief recommendation to her outside of his cash and tenement is that he wears a No. 6 shoe. A saloon keeper- at Paris, Tenn., would fain win her heart by means of a photograph and a positive assertion that while he is 36 years of age he has never loved a woman and did not think he ever should until he beard of ber. He postscribes the fact that he Is strictly temperate and of a good dis position. . s A wealthy Baltimore lady asks her to appropriate an acre of her claim to the cultivation of roses as a thanks offering to fortune. A Tennessee young man boasts of having in his veins the best cavalier blood of tbe south and offers a long pedigree as an Inducement for her to wed him. A young man of Waterbury, Conn., asks nothing better than to be her neighbor and wants her to inform him how he can secure the claim adjoining hers. He has the money to pay for it straight, he says. A "poor" young man living at Brazil- ton, Kan., is the only one who so far has Inclosed stamps for a reply to, his proposal. "My proposal to you Is not an idle fancy or transient passion," says a young manufacturer of New Trenton, Ind. "It Is prompted by an Impulse which I cannot control and impelled onward by a passion which over whelms every other consideration. I have dared to address you with the hope that fortune, which sometimes seconds a desperate resolve, may favor my suit. Pray, madam, do me the fa vor to consider and approve my pro posal." One young man who is attending the Illinois Medical college at Jacksonville wants and begs ber to wait two years for him. He says he will graduate then and will be in a position to make her lots of money. One young man, a Kansan, of course. says: "You do not know how to farm. I do. If you marry me, I can furnish $200 in cash and $350 worth of farming utensils." It is cold business with tbe Kansas man. Midsummer. Tbe katydid is in the grxm. The locust in the tree. led. on by Bight and one by day. They're sinrinf merrily. The butterfly sips nectar from. Tbe cup I every Bowr. And sweets are gathered by the bet la rarden. field and bowr. Tbe berries (leant through tangled vines Alone the dusty way; In IVelda the tasaeled rows cf cora Amid the breexea sway, ri'sh p in air tbe aable crows Co by with Capping wing, And from their coverts in the woods Tbe timid rabbits spring. The branches la the orefcar Js droop Within the passer's reach. Bores down by ever growing weight Of apple, pear and peach. And now and then one Xeares tbs stem To which it lorg bas dung. For It bas me Mewed ere its time Or to its heart waa stung. Down where the sea forever rolls. Or on the mountain crest. Or where the breeces swse? the lake, Man now ia finding rert. A vigor new ia in the atep. And hearts ia rapture, leap. For there if gladness all ths day, Aad with tbe night coves sleep. There's beaoty la tbs lake and sea And os tbe hill and plain; The sunshine gilds tbs wood and Bsldst There's blessing in th rain. , Tbe charm of nature new ire seen la all tbeir glorious prime. Fee there baa come to at again Tbe aoea of rammer tiaa. Plttabw-f Otfaoiels-Talsfrapa. Monument to Missionaries. A monument will be erected in Ober lln, O., soon which will be a suitable memorial to the memory of the mar tyred missionaries in China, says the New York World. It will take the form of an elaborate granite or marble shaft or a bowlder bearing the names of the missionaries who lost their lives. The memorial Is to be paid for by a volun tary subscription fund. The original 'Oberlln band" sent forth frora Ober- lin and many retired missionaries, in cluding Dr. Ament of Mark Twain fame, have homes In Oberlln. Tbe Christening: Rlnftr. The christening ring ia a new fad. It is a token of love and gratitude pre seated by a happy benedict to his wife on the occasion of the baptism of their first child. George Vanderbilt has the credit of having started tbe fashion. and the ring which he gave his wife Is said to be worth $0,000, having once been worn by a royal princess, says tbe Chicago News. The little finger la the place of the christening ring, and to be correct It ought to be set with tie birtbstone of the mother. -With a View to Submarine War. Uncle Sam's next new experiment. says the Boston Globe, Is likely to be In the line of submarine signaling. ACTS ABOUT GRAIN THEY HAY HURT, BUT NEVER YET. DID AN INJUSTICE. PR It is not our purpose herein to reit erate , the claim of "BEST" made by our hundred competitors without proof of the claim, or to claim super- ority by reason of a half century of existence without explaining why we have not made money enough to "re tire on, but wish to convey to the mind of the reader some idea of the facts now existing in relation to Grain Drills now made and for sale. The "EMPIRE" was the first drill made with runners. An established fact. ' - - " ' - Its popularity forced others to make drills like it. An apparent fact. ' There are more of them sold now an nually than drills of any other make. An unquestionable fact. There are more of them now used than all other makes combined isfactory fact to us. A et- It is the greatest success In thj his tory of grain seeding machinery. A fact , acknowledged by all save com- Lpetltors.. ; THE DEVICE WHICH IS CREATING A REVOLUTION IN GRAIN SOWING SECURES FOR THE SEED AIR AND MOISTURE, AND FOR THE FARM ERS AN INCREASED YIELDS Our 30-Shoe Grain Drill. If Cd'iO 8 8 0 P O O Q j t& 0 9 8 o n I MM&M Q ft A ft A h n.MiR MM .Aft fliA) The lightest in draft of all seeding machinery. Presses the bottom of the furrow, causing the moisture to rise and germ inate the seed. ' ' Does not clog with stubble, weeds or trash, but presses them into the ground and passes over. Draws stead ily through the soil and deposits the seed at a uniform depth. The EMPIRE Shoe is the result of many years experience and careful study to obtain the most perfect de vise for forming drill furrows. lt is a The above cut shows the 20-shoe drill with chain. This Is the staple size for three-horse drill. With chain coverers it is of the same draft as a fifteen-hoe drill in sowing grain at the same depth. Made with two poles, four-inch tire, double neck-yoke, , two truss-rods and well braced frame. Shipped with four horse evener and neck-yoke which can readily be changed for three horses. Below we give you a few reasons why the EMPIRE drill is the best. Come in and see this drill and we will show you superior points' the EMPIRE DRILL has over all others. Can show you much more than we can say. It . has tapered axles and the same gathering of the wheels at the bot tom and front as a wagon, making it the lightest draft drill made and re ducing the draft fully twenty-five per cent over drills that have straight axles. The axles never bend nor twist, are held solid and firm the same as axles on wagons. - Its wheels will never wear in and rub the box with our ' taper axle, like drills will when their wheels are on straight axles. We furnish either galvanized or rubber tubing and it is the only drill in the world that will sow tbe same amount of wheat, oats, barley,.:Or rye per acre with the same gear in equally the same time -without -making- any change. - It does not discriminate j between differ ent grains, but only requires a change for different quantities. Its motion is continuous . and positive, its feeding channel unalterable, its capacity cov ering the range of all requirements on the farm, its construction simple, its accuracy of distribution unerring, and its reliability lasting and permanent. This idea has been the hobby for over fifty years and the work, of the EMPIRE drill proves that it ap proaches closely if it is not a realiza tion of the thought. It must be un derstood and comprehended that it does not sow by weight, a bushel of wheat and a bushel of oats, rye or barley, vary in this respect, but they occupy the same space and so far as measurement goes are alike, and the peculiar feature Of the EMPIRE is that it does not discriminate between those four grains, which vary so great ly in constitution and weight, but measures them out of the drill box as accurately as if done with a sealed half bushel measure by a skilled farmer. I ' It is. this peculiarity which distin guishes it from all other drills and makes it a FORCED FEED. The vital principle of a grain drill Is its feeding device. This element in the EMPIRE is strictly scientific and the more it is studied and understood, the more its advantages are appreciated. It is the full realization of the force feed idea and needs no argument to sustain the claim. It is reliable because there is no guess work about it. Of all work on the farm the planting of seed should be the most carefully watched and ac curately done. ' 1 - , IT IS AS POSITIVE and as accur ate as the sealed half bushel as it con trols and measures the grain. POSITION DOES NOT EFFECT IT. It sows the same quantity going up hill, on the level or down hill. ITS MOTION .IS SLOW, wear slight, repair costs small, and will do as good work after long service as when new. IT SOWS wheat, rye, barley, oats, flax, peas, beans, corn, clover, timothy, millet, pumpkin and beet seed or any other seed ever sown. IS IT WISE to buy a complicated drill when, one that is simple can be had and do . the work better? . HOPPER BOTTOM. The bottom of the grain box is made of triangular blocks placed between each of the feed runs. This helps in sowing and is a benefit when seeding is finished and the drill has to be cleaned out. CUT-OFF VALVES for each run are placed inside of the box ready for use when wanted and out of the way when not needed. THE ZIG-ZAG is operated by a lever easily reached from either end and the shoes can be set even or zig-zagged from .three to six inches, which is a big advantage in trashy ground, as should the shoes occasionally gather trash under them, instead of raising up the shoes, take hold of your zig zag . lever throwing the shoes either forward or back, causing them to pass over the obstruction when the drill is in motion. perfect trash rider, lighter in draft than a hoe drill or broadcast seder, something which works perfectly in wet as well as dry ground; cuts into the sod and deposits the seed where nothing else will work at all. In dry ground it secures a better . yield . by pressing the bottoms of the furrows which forms a perfect seed bed. Pressure of the ground below the seed secures for the grain all of the three important factors HEAT, AIR and MOISTURE; and with even distribu tion and not too great depth, the best possible results will be obtained from the soil according to its state of fer tility. NO DEVICE EQUALS THE EMPIRE "V" SHAPED SHOE FOR THIS PURPOSE. The EMPIRE SHOES ARE DUR ABLE, being formed by two plates of steel welded at the lower edge with a third plate of steel between, which makes a solid shoe lH-inch up from A single Empire Shoe with Spring Attachment for lifting and Forc ing It Into the Ground. the lower edge, giving it sufficient width to allow seed to fall to the bot tom of the furrow and supplying re serve material to draw out when the shoe requires sharpening. These shoes are tempered plow-share steel, will wear longer and scour better than the soft, shoes In use on most other drills. The EMPIRE has either chain or pressure wheels for coverers. Empire Pressure Wheels always fol low the shoes In a vertical position. They have no side play and never wear in the hub. The wheel is indepen dent of the shoe; raising and falling of the wheel does not effect the pres sure on the shoe. Forty pounds pres sure can be thrown on. each wheel. The Spring Pressure Device THEhS IS NO WEIGHT ON THE HORSES' NECKS. The pressure spring is one of the most important features in a shoe drill. Upon it depends to a great ex tent the depth at which the grain Is planted, the surmounting of obstruc tions by the shoes and the allignmcnt of the rows. A purchaser cannot be too particular In examining the spring pressure de- virp in nurr hnelno- a 4i11 ChnnU f.vMwuo ... UUUUiU LliC iuu ttguix v iuu suuug, lia ble to break, difficult to repair or In- capable of adjustment, the drill is apt to cause worry and trouble to the dealer and farmer. REGULAR SIZES. Shoe Drills 13 to 20 Shoe, 5, 6 and 7 Inches apart. P r ices. 12-shoe .........$ 65.00 14-shoe 75.00 16-shoe , 85.00 18-shoe 100.00 20-shoe ..? 110.00 n Sum J1V MD C Formerly Farmers Supply Assn. 12 8130132 North 13th St., Lincoln. Nebraska. We sell everything.; Send 10 cents to pay part postage on OUR LARGE, NEW CATALOGUE, which will be ready to mail about September 1st. A ROYAL SECRET DIVULGED The Strang:. Proceedinga at the D.ath and Funeral of the Dowager Empren of Germany Explained Everything in connection with the sickness and death of the Dowager F.mpress of Germany has been sur rounded by &ec'recy. The dispatches have be?n so mixed and contradictory that every one has been puzzled over them. Laige masses of troops were kept cn guard and no one but the Em peror and bis immediate family was allowed to get a glimpse of what was going on. In explanation of these strange . proceedings the dispatches now say that the late Dowager Em press Frederick was married to Count von Seckendorf In 1896. It is believed to be true and has caused a great sen sation, it Is said that the kaiser has ordereda strict censorship of all tele grams on this account. Letters written by the Baroness von Rosbach, who was formerly one of the chief ladies in waiting to the empress, lend color to the story. The baroness insists that the . empress and Secken dorf were secretly - married In 1896; that they lived together as man and wife; that they had the deepest affec tion for each other; and that their marital relations , were as happy as they could . possibly be under the cir cumstances. ; The marriage was known . to. the kaiser, and to all . the empress royal relatives, but was never officially or even privately acknowledged. , The kaiser never allowed his children to j visit Friedrichshof, and only permitted Count von Seckendorf to enter his presence under protest and only then in his mother's suite. The Baroness von Rosbach may be taken as good authprity, for she has been always intimately - acquainted with the dowager empress. She is the principal of the Victoria college at Hamburg. This institution was founded by Empress Frederick, and was one of her pet schemes, the pupils being constantly under imperial supervision. Only girls of the highest rank were admitted to Victoria college. They were mainly of French, German and English families. The pupils were educated entirely according to the ideas of the empress, who passed only upon such instruction as she consid ered suitable for the daughters of per sons of position or for those who were likely to acquire rank by marriage. One . reason why large bodies of troops are guarding Friedrichshof, witn instruction to refuse admission to anybody, iff believed to be due to the demand of Count von Seckendorf that he be given the rights of a hus band to act as chief mourner. He pre sented a pitiable spectacle of grief as he made this demand after the em press death. He insisted that his wife was only an ex-empress, and there fore a private person. .' This demand led to several bitter In terviews between the kaiser and the count. The latter was openly defiant, and threatened to appeal to the laws of Prussia to protect him against the emperor's mediaeval1 tyranny. The Hamburg Dispatch published freely yesterday, stating that the love letters of Emperor Frederick had been placed in the empress coffin just prior to clos ing it, has been denied. The denial is believed to have been by command of Emperor William. The effort to keep up the fiction that royalty is something different from other persons of the human race can not much longer endure. All the roy alties of Europe are cousins or more closely related and they continually intermarry. This defiance of the laws of nature will end sooner or later In their extermination. The whole race will become barren or reduced to idiots and imbeciles. The King of Norway and Sweden is said to be grandfather to all the young royalties of Europe,' Just as Queen Victoria was grand motherthat is, every one of them Is in some way related to these two per sons. Even royalty cannot defy the laws of nature, and nature has it set down that sooner or later the whole race will become extinct, just as all former royal races have. What be came of the Pharoahs and the Caesars? They Work Whik You Sleep. ' While your mind and body rest Cas carets Candy Cathartic repair your digestion, your liver, your bowels, put them in perfect order. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. All druggistSj 10c 6 What is "Nothing." An old Scottish farmer, being alected a member, of the local school . board, visited the school, and tested the In telligence of the class by his questions. The first inquiry was: Noo, boys, can ony o' you tell me what naething is?'.' After a moment's silence a small boy in a back seat arose and replied: "It's what ye gie me t'other day for haudin' yer horse!" London Answers. Easily Earned. An election petition was being tried, and a witness was ca lled to . prove "bribery." "One of the gentlemen says to me. 'Hodge, you must vote for the tcrles,' " said the witness. "And what did you answer to that?" asked the counsel. v "Well, says I, How much?' " "And what did the agent say?" "He didn't say nothin'. The other gentleman comes to me, and says, 'You must vote for the liberals, Hodge. " "And what did you answer?" "1 said, "How much?" So he arst me what t'other gentleman offered, and I told him 6 shillings." "And what did the liberal agent do? "He gave me 10." , .Counsel sits down triumphantf and up starts the other side. , ,,- nirt vnn vntft for the liberals?" ' ' "No." - " -1 -'r - "Did you vote for. the torles?" "No. I ain't got a vote!" London Spare Moments! . J,. ,